Introduction to Intervals

5 Making Contexts for Intervals

The trick to identifying melodic intervals quickly and easily is to refer to a melodic context you can remember easily. The table below shows some well-known melodies that use melodic intervals in their most common contexts. Try to find some of your own.

Interval Ascending Descending
m2 using mi/fa

Berlin, “I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas”

“Happy Birthday to You”

m2 using ti/do

“Joy to the World”

M2 using do/re or re/mi

“Are You Sleeping?”

“Hot Cross Buns”

m3 using mi/sol

“O Canada”

“America the Beautiful”

M3 using do/mi

 

“Oh When the Saints”

“Skip to My Lou”

P4 using sol/do

“Here Comes the Bride”

Handel, “Hallelujah Chorus”

tritone using ti/fa

Williams, Indiana Jones theme

P5 using do/sol

Williams, Star Wars theme

Tchaikovsky, Swan Lake

m6 using mi/do

Joplin, “The Entertainer”

Alexander, “All Things Bright and Beautiful”

M6 using sol/mi

“My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean”

“Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen”

m7 using sol/fa

Bernstein, “There’s a Place for Us”

M7 using do/ti

Williams, Superman theme continuation

P8 using do/do

Arlen, “Somewhere, Over the Rainbow”

Listen to this Spotify playlist for recordings of these contexts for intervals.

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Integrated Aural Skills Copyright © 2024 by Miranda Wilson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.